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Original Article

Supermarket Speak: Increasing Talk Among Low‐Socioeconomic Status Families

Katherine E. Ridge

Corresponding Author

Department of Psychology, Temple University

Address correspondence to Katherine E. Ridge, Institute of Child Development, University of Minnesota, 51 East River Parkway, MN 55455; e‐mail:

ridg0053@umn.edu

.
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Deena Skolnick Weisberg

Department of Psychology, Temple University

Present address: Department of Psychology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, 3401 Walnut Street, PA 19104Search for more papers by this author
Hande Ilgaz

Department of Psychology, Temple University

Present address: Department of Psychology, Bilkent University, Bilkent 06800, Ankara, TurkeySearch for more papers by this author
Kathryn A. Hirsh‐Pasek

Department of Psychology, Temple University

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Roberta Michnick Golinkoff

School of Education, University of Delaware

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First published: 15 July 2015
Cited by: 5

ABSTRACT

Children from low‐socioeconomic status (SES) families often fall behind their middle‐class peers in early language development. But interventions designed to support their language skills are often costly and labor‐intensive. This study implements an inexpensive and subtle language intervention aimed at sparking parent–child interaction in a place that families naturally visit: the supermarket. We placed signs encouraging adult–child dialogue in supermarkets serving low‐ and mid‐SES neighborhoods. Using an unobtrusive observational methodology, we tested how these signs affected adult–child interactions. When signs were present in supermarkets serving low‐SES neighborhoods, both the amount and the quality of talk between adults and children increased significantly, compared to when the signs were not present; signs had little effect in middle‐SES supermarkets. This study demonstrates that implementing simple, cost‐effective interventions in everyday environments may bolster children's language development and school readiness skills.

Number of times cited: 5

  • , Parent–child conversations about literacy: a longitudinal, observational study, Journal of Child Language, 45, 02, (511), (2018).
  • , The Impact of Language Experience on Language and Reading, Topics in Language Disorders, 10.1097/TLD.0000000000000144, 38, 1, (66-83), (2018).
  • , Identifying Pathways Between Socioeconomic Status and Language Development, Annual Review of Linguistics, 10.1146/annurev-linguistics-011516-034226, 3, 1, (285-308), (2017).
  • , Parents' and experts' awareness of learning opportunities in children's museum exhibits, Journal of Applied Developmental Psychology, 49, (39), (2017).
  • , Learning Landscapes: Where the Science of Learning Meets Architectural Design, Child Development Perspectives, , (2018).